Emma. wrote:What about the adverse possession question? Did he get the whole 100 acres, or just the 40 he was farming?

Pretty sure it was the 40 he was farming.

this. to AP property you don't actually occupy (i.e., the other 60 acres) you need color of title.

And fresh prince, how you gonna leave me hanging on the easement stuff?

Too tired. But yeah you need to read up on what easements are vs. covenants, how easements are created terminated and run with the land and don't run with the land. It's a separate doctrine (though not terribly different from covenants, so not too hard to get up to speed on).

I remember from prop class that all easements, covenants, and ESs are types of servitudes. So an easement is neither a covenant nor an equitable servitude. And he's def right that burden of easement doesn't run to BFP.

This was my understanding of this as well. But FreshPrince seems pretty sure of it, so idk. For me, a gov't ordering you to clear your land to allow for pedestrians to walk across it all day, seemed like physical taking, but yeah, idk.

I actually wasn't aware of tbe distinction you were all discussing, but now that I read it you could be right. All I remember was that there was still economically viable use of the land because teh dude could still use his property aside from the set-offs and I thjought that was a hint. whatevs.

I know i've beaten this to death on this forum and I understand nobody can predict anything, but I currently have reviewed half of remedies and have not reviewed ANYTHING at all for civ pro, agency/partnership, and corporations...

With 4 hours remaining before bedtime, should I just put full force into remedies and pray that 3 subjects dont appear? I know that 1 more CA subject will appear....it could be a full blown remedies or trust/wills? Pray to the Lawd it is not agency/corp/civpro

Remedies is fast. It's a really easy review. Spend 1/2-an hr on that, not more than 20 min on cov pro, and spend the rest of the timeon ev, Ks, and Wills.

TaipeiMort wrote:See, that's where its confusing. Is an easement a physical occupation (like a power line), or a restriction on alienation (like an order not to build on part of your land)? I'm guessing the former-- I wish I would of actually read the answer choices.

90% sure its a physical taking.

Me too.

"Had California simply required the Nollans to make an easement across their beachfront available to the public on a permanent basis in order to increase public access to the beach ... we have no doubt there would have been a taking."

is that the one that had an answer of it being usable? i think i put that though i don't know what law suggests that. there was another about a guy that expressly granted an easement, then bought back the property (so it merged and went away) then resold that part of the lot and then died and the son i think built a fence and another property owner offered an easement at a price, and there was a takings question about a setback too

The answer to that fucking takings question better be that it required the farmers to allow the hikers on their land. Scalia said straight up that a forced easement was a per se taking in some case I read in law school.

I picked the investment-backed expectations because that's one of the factors for partial taking from that one case...

An option is a promise to hold an offer open for a fixed amount of time. Most courts hold that nominal consideration will make an option binding if the option is in writing. For example:

Sunshine Orange Groves offers to sell Squeeze Me Juice Company oranges for $5 a bushel. Sunshine agrees to keep the offer open for thirty days in exchange for Squeeze Me’s promise to pay $5. Sunshine’s promise to hold the offer open for the thirty days is an option and, because nominal consideration makes an option binding, the promise of $5 constitutes consideration. Please note that in order for the option to be binding, Sunshine’s promise must be in writing.

TaipeiMort wrote:See, that's where its confusing. Is an easement a physical occupation (like a power line), or a restriction on alienation (like an order not to build on part of your land)? I'm guessing the former-- I wish I would of actually read the answer choices.

90% sure its a physical taking.

Me too.

"Had California simply required the Nollans to make an easement across their beachfront available to the public on a permanent basis in order to increase public access to the beach ... we have no doubt there would have been a taking."

a male human wrote:I picked the investment-backed expectations because that's one of the factors for partial taking from that one case...

there was another question about a guy who had a farm (probably) for a long time and did nothing but put up a big sign saying buildings will be developed here or something, and by the time he got around to doing anything, the zoning code changed to only allow for residential not commercial space... was it for that question? because i didn't think he had any expectations, he was another dumb lazy landowner

a male human wrote:I picked the investment-backed expectations because that's one of the factors for partial taking from that one case...

there was another question about a guy who had a farm (probably) for a long time and did nothing but put up a big sign saying buildings will be developed here or something, and by the time he got around to doing anything, the zoning code changed to only allow for residential not commercial space... was is for that question? because i didn't think he had any expectations, he was another dumb lazy landowner

a male human wrote:I picked the investment-backed expectations because that's one of the factors for partial taking from that one case...

there was another question about a guy who had a farm (probably) for a long time and did nothing but put up a big sign saying buildings will be developed here or something, and by the time he got around to doing anything, the zoning code changed to only allow for residential not commercial space... was it for that question? because i didn't think he had any expectations, he was another dumb lazy landowner

a male human wrote:I picked the investment-backed expectations because that's one of the factors for partial taking from that one case...

there was another question about a guy who had a farm (probably) for a long time and did nothing but put up a big sign saying buildings will be developed here or something, and by the time he got around to doing anything, the zoning code changed to only allow for residential not commercial space... was it for that question? because i didn't think he had any expectations, he was another dumb lazy landowner

Yeah, his rights as a prior inconsistent use hadn't vested. He would have had to start construction. If there is one thing I know it is zoning and takings, I fucking aced Land Use last year.

a male human wrote:I picked the investment-backed expectations because that's one of the factors for partial taking from that one case...

there was another question about a guy who had a farm (probably) for a long time and did nothing but put up a big sign saying buildings will be developed here or something, and by the time he got around to doing anything, the zoning code changed to only allow for residential not commercial space... was is for that question? because i didn't think he had any expectations, he was another dumb lazy landowner